Beyond Reality discussion
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What are you reading in June 2014?
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Nick
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Jun 01, 2014 12:10PM

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I finished reading Many Waters and A Swiftly Tilting Planet by Madeleine L'Engle.
Reviews here and here.
I'm not sure what I'm reading next at this point. I wanted to read the graphic novel edition of A Wrinkle in Time, but I'm having issues with the ebook file I purchased so I will have to figure something else out to read until I can get that ebook working.

I just started The Martian for our discussion, after tearing through the entire The Girl of Fire and Thorns trilogy in a matter of days.

The first 2 books for me this month will be Woken Furies by Richard K. Morgan and The Thousandfold Thought by R. Scott Bakker, each the third book in a trilogy. I'm not sure what will follow those.

I just picked up The Strain from the library, narrated by Ron Perlman. Man is he fantastic to listen to!
I have a few graphic novels due back at the library soon, so I'll be getting to those too. I'll post when I read them.
Happy reading everyone!

Whatever else I decide on, I'll be reading my first Terry Pratchett book, Wintersmith, for my IRL book club.

Thanks for the comment Kythe42. I understand the need to be overly picky; it is not a detriment at all. At this point, however, Candiss and I are not going to be rushing to changing any of Stefan's long time rules.
Stefan expressly told us to close each month's "What are you reading?" thread on the first day of the next month, for two reasons: 1. so each thread doesn't become too long and rambling, and 2. because it's no longer the month in question. As it's no longer May, we close the May thread.
We are keeping up the long-time clerical habits established by Stefan, and that if there is a particular discussion that was going on in the May thread, you are more than welcome to continue it on in the June thread. Pleeeease do.
Thanks.
Nick, for the mods

Kythe42, I can definitely see how it could be annoying for us to close the thread right on the 1st of the month. But it's a long-time practice, as Nick says above, that we keep with because things have the potential to get messy and disorganized really quickly. The threads don't always get really long, but we're had mod frustrations in the past related to this issue. Also, if we don't start a new thread, there have been times where people message us asking where it is and/or a member will start such a thread themselves, leading us to eventually having two or three conflicting and overlapping threads. It's hard to succinctly describe the situation when it's not actively happening and thus providing a clear example.
So, anyhow... It's really for our convenience and to make sure the membership has one obvious, tidy place to post what they're reading. :)
/removes mod hat

Anyway the short version is that I've never encountered the problems you describe in any other group I belong to and this is the only group I belong to that actually closes the monthly threads. I'm not saying I don't believe you, but just that I've never encountered the problems you describe.
I understand you have your reasons and I respect that, but I'm going to have to think long and hard about whether I want to continue to post here when I'm already a member of several other groups on various sites, none of which have these restrictions on the monthly threads. Whatever I end up deciding, I want to let you know that there's no hard feelings. From one (former)mod to another I understand that everyone has their own way that they like to run things.


All my groups do this.......

Nick wrote: "I just finished 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson. I had fully intended to go for his book Antarctica as I enjoy reading in the summer about frigid places. But..."
I've only read the 3 Mars books by Robinson, and while I like them and they stuck with me, I found the science to be pretty overwhelming. Are his other books like that, too?
I've only read the 3 Mars books by Robinson, and while I like them and they stuck with me, I found the science to be pretty overwhelming. Are his other books like that, too?

It's been a few years since I read the Mars trilogy - mid/late 90's if I remember correctly.
Did Robinson make a reference to the Abrahamic faiths as having sprung from a culture of shepherding (c.f. Jesus and Moses...)?

/book/show/2...
(hated it)
Starting the Shockwave Rider by Brunner.
/book/show/8...
In hindisght it seems both of these books deal with similar themes. Hopefully I'll enjoy one more than the other.

that's my favourite John Wyndham novel though they are pretty much all very good.
Juston wrote: "Did Robinson make a reference to the Abrahamic faiths as having sprung from a culture of shepherding (c.f. Jesus and Moses...)?"
Yikes, that is something I don't remember.
Yikes, that is something I don't remember.

Getting ready to start Lexicon (or maybe The Martian).


I dont think he has anything on Jordan or Martin.

This might be a really dumb question, but which Jordan and Martin? (I wasn't sure if you were saying King wasn't that great or that there are better fantasy series than the Dark Tower series).

Hope y'all don't mind me jumping in here!



Yikes, that is something I don't remember."
Re: 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson
I don't recall Abrahamic faiths references specifically, but that doesn't mean references were not there. Sometimes his science can get, as Kathi says, overwhelming, and other things get lost in my reader's eye. Mostly what bogged me down in this book were the lengthy passages where characters were lost (especially the 100 pages or so where a group of them had to walk through underground tunnels on Mercury -- yes, 100 pages of walking through tunnels). Having said that, I found the book fascinating. It was just the "right" amount of science for me. Non-scientist that I am, I still like reading about it by people who know a lot about it. A lot may be over my head, but if the writer can make it sound credible, even in my mind's confusion, more the better.

“Look, there’s a history to all this stuff. Monotheism is a belief system that you see appearing in early herding societies. The greater their dependence on sheep herding, the more likely their belief in a shepherd god.

“Look, there’s a history to all this stuff. Monotheism is a belief system..."
Ah! I guess the question for me is whether Robinson means that statement literally or some broader general context? Though couched in science fiction, many of his stories (I'm thinking Red Mars specifically) are, in reality, investigations into societal revolutions -- what makes groups of people do what they do? I can see his attitude on religion stemming from this viewpoint. So he generalizes all Monotheism as stemming from herding societies. I'm not sure I agree (for instance, I think the influence of Egyptian Monotheism was great in the Middle East), but the idea keeps a consistent sociological viewpoint for Robinson's purposes.


Feels good to step back into that world and the strong charactersization narrative.

This might be a really dumb question, but which Jordan and Martin? (I wasn't sure if you were saying King wasn't that great or that..."
Wrong quote. You mentioned that King took forever tyo finish the Dark Tower. I said he had nothing on Jordan and Martin
I dunno, it was 22 years between the publication of the first and the last book of the Dark Tower series. Not sure about Jordan, but I know Martin hasn't taken THAT long...at least, not yet!
I'm in short story mode right now until school is out (one more week!) and I have the time to lose myself in a novel again! I just finished a set by Michael Swanwick that I really enjoyed.
I'm in short story mode right now until school is out (one more week!) and I have the time to lose myself in a novel again! I just finished a set by Michael Swanwick that I really enjoyed.

I've just started an historical Novel, The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton, the winner of the .

Now reading Royal Assassin and enjoying it so far.
Just finished Woken Furies by Richard K. Morgan--the best and most satisfying of the Takeski Kovacs books, in my opinion. Thanks to this group for getting me started when Altered Carbon was BOTM.
Next up is The Thousandfold Thought by R. Scott Bakker.
Next up is The Thousandfold Thought by R. Scott Bakker.
Jo wrote: "I have been reading The Sevenwaters books by Juliette Marillier. Thoroughly recommend them."
I have those on my shelf. Should move them up...
I have those on my shelf. Should move them up...


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